Do exaggerated chelicerae function as weapons or genitalia in a long-jawed spider? Functional allometric analysis yields an answer
Autor: | Anne Danielson-François, Humayra Nikhat Sullivan |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Male Zoology 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences Animals Body Size Genitalia Operational sex ratio Sex Characteristics biology Animal Structures Spiders Feeding Behavior biology.organism_classification Arthropod mouthparts 030104 developmental biology Fertility Fang Tetragnatha Sexual selection Sexual cannibalism Animal Science and Zoology Female Allometry Tetragnatha elongata Developmental Biology |
Zdroj: | Journal of morphologyREFERENCES. 282(1) |
ISSN: | 1097-4687 |
Popis: | From the elongated neck of the giraffe to the elaborate train of the peacock, extreme traits can result from natural or sexual selection (or both). The extreme chelicerae of the long-jawed spiders (Tetragnatha) present a puzzle: do these exaggerated chelicerae function as weapons or genitalia? Bristowe first proposed that Tetragnatha chelicerae function as a holdfast because these spiders embrace chelicerae during mating. This hypothesis has remained untested until now. Here, we use functional allometry to examine how extreme chelicerae develop and perform in the long-jawed spider Tetragnatha elongata. Similar to other Tetragnatha species, chelicerae were longer in adult males than in adult females. Overall, we confirm Bristowe's hypothesis: elongation only occurred in the adult stage. However, we propose that chelicerae function as more than a holdfast in T. elongata. Male chelicerae exhibited positive allometry, which suggests scaling as weapons rather than genitalia. However, fieldwork revealed that the operational sex ratio is female-biased and both adult male-male competition and sexual cannibalism were rarely observed. Consequently, we propose that the positive allometry of male chelicerae may result from sexual selection to mechanically mesh with larger and more fecund females. Evidence for mechanical mesh includes multiple traits ranging from apophyses and grooves to guide teeth on the basal portion of the chelicerae. In contrast, we propose that chelicerae of females are analogous to the female peacock's tail: shortened by natural selection limiting the exaggeration of sexually selected traits. Indeed, females had increased foraging efficiency compared to males and exhibited negative cheliceral allometry. We discuss the implications for the evolution of elongated chelicerae in Tetragnatha. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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